covering the week's top textbooks like Linux bias the latest experimental addition to the Chrome browser promises to save a ton of power usage a new flag in the canary version of chrome called throttle javascript timers in background will cut down on the processing that normally happens in background tabs and it could add two hours to a laptop's runtime JavaScript's timers often track user interaction with a web page checking things like the scroll position and add interaction while the tab is open this also happens on background tabs which really isn't useful since by definition a background tab isn't being interacted with when you have a bunch of tabs open these timers can chew through a good amount of battery for no reason normally background tabs can trigger a wake-up once per second now in canary if you turn on the new throttle JavaScript timer setting any tab that is being in the background for more than five minutes we'll have these timers disabled with wake-ups limited to once per minute Google Ransom - sorry Google ran some tests to see what kind of impact this would have on battery life for the first test they used a 20-18 15-inch MacBook Pro and loaded up 36 background tabs with a blank foreground tab then let the laptop run until it died but the feature turned on the laptop lasted two hours longer or 28% longer than the default settings that's a huge improvement and it still can't get croup but it still can't get chrome up to the level of Apple's Safari which bested Chrome by three hours with the default settings and by one hour with the new throttling flag the first test showed just how much power can be sucked up by background tabs but the next test was more of a real-world use case it swapped out of the blank foreground tab for a YouTube video with an actual foreground task going on the difference was less dramatic but still significant without throttling tabs chrome lasted four point seven hours and with throttling it got an extra thirty nine minutes lasting 5.3 hours safari was not included in the second test while these are promising results Google says they are still investigating how limiting background timers will affect web pages while Google says that the work done from these JavaScript timers was often not valuable to the user when the page was in the background they also don't want to break web pages which provide valuable background services like incoming chat and video messages media playback and notifications after a 50% roll out on the canary version google plans to gather feedback from web developers before the change hits the wider chrome user base you know that's an interesting story because for my wife and I were both Chrome users we often have a ton of tabs open I mean if I'm doing you know research for work or she's doing you know different things at home or we're helping the kids with school between their schoolwork and and the research that they're doing and the the work that they're working on on their Google Docs we could at any point have a couple dozen tabs open and I mean the with Mike with our family computer we've got the dual monitors and it's not uncommon for me to have a browser off to the one screen with two dozen tabs and then my main screen where I've got a couple of main tabs and so to have an ANA grant it's not a laptop but to have that power saving is huge because not only is it less power on the computer that's being used but over time you could see some savings and you're sure you know you mentioned it's not a laptop and and one of the things that Beckett didn't touch on Jeff was performance yeah and I do think about how even on our desktop computer at home my youngest will have that same scenario 20 tabs open and then he'll switch user oh right so which is great because Linux Mint allows us to have multiple people logged in at once but now we've got somebody else logging in and double tops yeah so his Java JavaScript timers are still going off in his browser on his profile yes so I wonder how it would affect performance as well yeah I I'm very interested to see I mean I I know it's a small change yeah going from one second to the one-minute but I'm really looking forward to see the impact because I do think it's gonna be it will have that you know performance power but and especially for older devices like if you if you've got an older laptop that's always struggling I mean not just battery saving but if it does improve some of that background performance you know that could breathe you know a little bit of extra life into those devices besides I think it's a great great idea a great feature yeah [Music]